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Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1863-08-22

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-.--: r -.- , ...... ''-.:. 31 1" i. U'Jolf.2 si - V7 t? rv r.-r . "v-d - 3 W V: ;j.v 'Ci.T Jt4 1 3 ' .A ;i if i if ii y i j i ii ii c if x -v .si r. - ."X. a flee in Wm1w1 Blolt, 8d 8 tor. - . . . : .. . .. Tltftva. Two DoITm Dr Aannoi. vaTkblia Tiupj$2.50 within liX noatka; $3.00 ifUr thi xpl (Tnna Um New York Metropolitan Keeord. THE MEIf JFOB OHIO, , A CAMPAIGN BONO. An " Watl w A Wbh. Com, toaniM, yor Toloee, And theat alovd fof Val, And tow tht our next Oorotmor - - Ho must bo Mid ho shall. Oh! wont old Abo furious, And wont Burn vide look blno, - When they find that wo'ro oloctod - Vallaudigbam and Pnghf Tho men for Ohio, - Tho moo lor Ohio, Tallandigham and Pack. Thoy think to oTorawo us. They think they'll crash sts yt, "Bot wo Westerns aro tho tonghost too The Liaeolsiitos bavo mot. Wo laugh at aad defy their threats, Wo care not what thoy do, Bot we're fcoond to have elected YaUandigbam and Pngh. , . Tho men for Ohio, The men for Ohio, , Tho men for Ohio. Vallandighaai and Pagh. ' Oh ? brethren don't forget that time, When Barnsido was oar fate, And laws were superseded By order Thirty-Eight. Then, like a freo bora Western man, - Onr Vol spoke bold and trao ; Oh ! when he's rhosen Gorernor What will poor Bornsidodof " Won: be skedaddle, W.,n he ke l-ddle, W. nt he skedaddle. As he's well used to do ? - Tbey eall ns traitors," "copperheads, " We care o't tho' bey do v . But they'd ) es' D"t tread on cupcrLds, Or they will surely m. If they rouse us "they'll wake up aaks" Believe it Sr it's true; So they'd bettor fall into our ranVs And rte fur Val and Pugh. The n.eii ror Ohio, . The men f r OLio, ' The men for Ohio, . . Vallandigbam una lugb. The Disunion Candidate Defines His Position. John Brough, the abolition disunion candi- date lor uorernor ot unto, cornea out ooiuer i a f yv " . . a. - t. t 1 in hia treason than many of his lollowera. In his speech at Marietta h said : For I, for one, spurn the- Crittenden resolutions, and T do it for the reason that the first gun fired upon Snmpter relieved us " from the thraMotn of slavery; and I never desire to ee peac . tt 'rMLwith ihif jnatitntin reiuta-ted . - - - ' - In his Cleveland speech he was still more explicit. Upon that occasion he used the following language; "Fcr many years you are aware, I have held ideas of a conservative character on tfaia slavery question. I have changed my view. I now see the impossibility of permanent suc cess in onr renublic as looeaa any portion of It is afflicted with the leprous disease. Either slavery must be torn out, root and branch, or our Government will exist no longer." . So Johnny Brough wanted the war to abolish slavery, nor is he willing the war shall cease or the States be re-united under the Constitution until slavery is in someway abolished. What a vile traitor he is; Against the Bestoration of the Union. Fornxt's Philadelphia Press commences a Late article thus: "Ho matter what may be the condition or the terms -of re-union, the honor and &ith of the North, the victories of our armies, the struggles we have undergone, the sacrifices we have made, the hopes that we give to the future, all demand that there thall be no resto ration of the American Republic without freedom a the corner ttone. ' So if the South should offer to come , back into the Union as it was before the war, the door of reconciliation is closed upon her .- The war, according to Formey, is to be kept up for that for what? For the freedom of the negro t - Twenty Dollars Reward. The Abolition papers parade the following remark of Mr. Vallahdioham, and represent it a Having oeen made since toe commence ment of the rebellion : . "Then, sir. I am not a Southern man either. although irrth if most unholy and unconstitu tional eruat'ie against the ISouth, in the must of the in vaun arson, insurrection and .murder to which she has been subject, and with which she is still threatened with the torch of the incendiary1 and the dagger of the assassin suspended over her. my most cordial sympathies are wholly with her' . - , We will pay any man twenty dollars who will show its any letter or speech of Jlr. Val- LANBiQBAk's in which this language is used other than in, his speech delivered in Congress on the 15th of decern ber, 1850, against the JeA Baowis rauf n to'Virginia. omci Far-mar. - I Woe Unto the Bad Hen I ' .The indictment now pending before1 the people Of Qhio against Abolition rule contains these charges: : . , . : :.; "... That it baa trampled our State Constitution usder foot ;.-s-.v-- ,-. That it has eoapended our State laws j ."- That it haa readered our iStat Court and Jadzee powerleee i m ' j i -; . . . That it har teixed oar eitixeni; imprison ed and baaiahed them without ktue proceea of - Jaw.' r.i-.i t.i-i 9ri That H haa overawed 4h Legislator by the ayoas .a.'jfi: m.r'i.tr viiu:: ? And thoU it luuf atteta peed to array 4ha eoli diers we foraisbed to putldewBrtha eebeUioa agamat the loyal cstiseaa who furnished ibem, f Ja deadly eeUt.7WeowXteiir.. . ABI(MAiaTALN.-ATJn nAMiV nrrr T-n 55i?!ELI?TJETENT. TI1E..CONSTI- 7H1CH IHiVEjfiWfjRn rrt .cnoono? I ' DOS. SIWDEX .U. DOCGL SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, He declares War to be Disunion. He AdYoc&tet Peace the- Oalj Policy . That . Will Lead ta Union. P&OFZXSSZO V7AJLU1XIQ, UcIiFCrcd 13thornrch,18Cl. The following extract ia from the last speech Mr. Douglas made in the United State Sen ate, and the closing official act of hia life. Thus far, his prophetic warnings have proved true. Bead and ponder them, fellow citizen : We are told that the President is soinir to enforce the law in the seceded 6tates. . How? By oeitinr out the militia and ueine the armv aari navy.. These term are used a freely and as flippantly as if we were a military Government, where martial law-was the only rule of action, and the will of the monarch wasxhe only law on the subject. Sir, the President can not use the army or the navy for any purpose not authorized by law. What is that? If there be an insurrection in any State against the laws and authority thereof, the President can use the military to put it down only when called upon by the dtate Legislature, if it be in wesaion, or if Hcan not be convened, by the Governor. He can not interfere except when requested. If, on the contrary, the insurrection be against the laws of the United States, instead of a State, then the President can use the military as a paste cktv-t in aid of the marshal in euch cssee as are eo extreme that jictal authoi iiy and the powers ot tho marshal can not put down the obstruction. The military can not be used in any case whatever, except in aid of civil process to assist the marshal to execute the writ. I shall not quote the law on the sul.jeot, but if the gentlemen will refer to the acta of 1795 and ll8, they wiil find that hy the act of 179.J the niiJitia only could be railed out to aid in the enforcement of the laws when resisted. -to.t-uch an extnt that the marshal could riot overcome the obstruction, Bythe act of 6i', the President ia authorized to use the army and navy to aid ia enforcing the. hwfl in uJl canes where it was before lawiui to Ute the militia. Hence, the military power, no matter whether naval or regulars, volunteers or militia, can te used only in atii of tit civil auihorities. . Now, sir. how are you going to create a case in one ot thu&e seceded States where the Prea- M'01 wa8 authorized to call out the military ? You must rust procure a writ from the judge describing the crime; you roiwt place them in the hands of the marshal, abd must meet such obstructions as render it impossible for him to execute it; and then, and not till then,- can you call on the military. Where ia roar judge in the seceded States ? s Where is your marshal? You have no civil authorities tbercaad, the Preside, in him inaugural, tells you he does not intend to appoint any. He said he intended to use the power confided in htm to collect the revenue, but beyond that he did not intend to go- You are told, therefore, in the inaugural, that he is going to appoint no judge, no marshal, no civil officers in the seceded States that can execute the law, and hence we are told that he does not intend to use the array, the navy, or the .militia, for any such purpose. . . is it your purpose to rush this county blindly into war at a coat of $400,000,000 per annum i. to levy $200,000,000 direct taxes upon the people, and then call npon them to pay it because you have involved us in civil war? Sir, I expect to stand by my country tinder all circumstances, and hence I will aaveier, if I can, from being plunged into civil war of in definite duration, that ; will require a quarter of a million of -men and exorbitant taxation, levied on one half of the American people, to subdue the other half. . Remember this extraordinary amount of revenue, these extraordi-n f numbers of men, are to be called for in eighteen States to fight fifteen ; for it is useless to disguise the fact, that whenever you make the question one of peace or war the slavehold-ing States will be a unit, and will be fifteen against eighteen. Are we prepared for civil war with all its horrors and calamities?. I repeat that it is time the old line of policy was adopted, and that the country knew it. In my opinion, we must choose, and that promptly, between one of the three lines of policy. . - . ' .. 1. Thjj restoration and preservation of the. Union by such amendments to the Constitution, a3 will insure domestic tranquility ; safety and equality of all the Sta'es, and thus restore peace, unity and fraternity to the whole country ; or, . , ; 2. A peaceful dissolution of the Union, by recognizing the independence of such. States as refuse to remain in the Union without such constitutional amendment and the establishment of a liberal system of social and -com mercial intercourse with them, by treaties of commerce ana amity ; or, 3. War, with a view of subjugation and military occupation of those States which have seceded or may secede from the Union. . I repeat, that, in my opinion, you must adopt and pursue one of thee line of policy. The sooner yon choose between' them and proclaim your choice to the. country., the better for you. the better for us, the better for every friend of liberty and constitutional government throughout the' world. . In . my opinion, the first proposition is the best, and the last is the worst. , " I am in favor of such amendment, to the Constitution as will take that question; out of Con gress and restore peace, to the country That may' be done by non-intervention by popular sovereignty, as it is called, or by the Crittenden amendment making., an equitable partition of the territory, between the twoaeo-tiona, witb a self-execuUng clause prohibiting it on one aide and protracting it qn th other. st may o oone in .various ways. I prefer euch peaceable disunion time to civil amendment at will beetttUfacwJry' fey VirwltTta, North Carolina, Tenpessee, ad .other border u Bu,- pq paciocauon wojca will satisfy thera' will create a Uni6n party in the Cotton Slate which wRl soou eiabraoe a larg majority of the peopl' ia tho StaXeav andbnjitbeta b.4t.tlwr.owiuree-rWia an4, accord,. and io doing tthuav refton, strengthen and.rjernetnat thm. AmM U F jMTV y:b4t4?er-r ew..wMVswwyA Maryiaiuir and .the , Border etJrteUtJ ow fa ik, fraim) it a Union party ia the seceded tatc that will bring thenLbdr.bjhjL InvolajitarV" ao-tion 50C t)fawwtXoopiirtXoti iiyeat anfiperre the. Oon rwrttM.uij vi,fii.viaM7n3i.ff ftif K-i :'i L AU 0 VMUlHUilf t AUMU IMl'T m -U N lU U(T' Will COL WPT NAL, ETERNAL SEP ABATI02J ! I Haae,' CBN AL SEPARATION 1 1 H&e,Tar liar and Ubalara trliaUuV'3 dicguiaa it a Jo jmajv every Uaipn. 10 in America rnnst, advocate, such amepwents to the'CoosUtntion as.will preaerve peace and r- lore me . ujiivo ruus ieiri (jibubwdS waether .openly,' or . secitlr' plptUng Js destruction, is the advocate of Deacefursece&siOn. pr.of WAR, as the surest means b''" renderfpgl reunion ana reconstruction, 11 trvtS)) ijtiii, I have too. much respect ' for 'hia , intellect 'la oeiieve, ror one nonicBi, iotiqcre, 10 a man - Hence.-1 do not. mean, if i. can. pre vent it. that tbesnemiea of the .Unioa-men cloitins to destroy ive&au drag tut .cpnntry, into war,, under rRSTsurr or fretecting jtb. puplto property, and.eufotcinff the laws aod - collect- urine reTtnne. wuen.uieiv ooieci a4iannon. : .1 , . 1 .1 1 . and WAR raa xxAva -or accoarusBtxa. csxaisHKo rintrosx.-; -Ki . . t . Disonionists, therefor, are divided into two classes the on open, the- other secret secessionists. ' The on is- in favor of peacful se cession and recognition of independence j the other u in favor ot war as the snrest tneabs of accomplishing the object, and making the asparation final and eternal. 1 am a UNION MAN, and hence AGAINST WAR; but if tho Union must be temporarily broken by a' revo lution, and the establishment of a facto government by some of th State, let no act be done that will prevent restoration and preservation: Peace ia the only policy that can lead to that result. '. ; - ; 1 But we are told, and hear Me repeated every where, that we must find out whether we have a Governments "Have, we a Government ?" ia the question; and we are -told that we must test that question br usinethe Tnilitarv rjower to put down alt discontented spirit. - Sir, this question, "Have we a Goerriment?': ha been propounded by every -tyrant who -baa tried to keep his feet oa the necks of the peo ple since the world began. - ; - When the Barons demanded iftona Charta froth King John at Runneymedev he exclaim ed, " Have we A Gbven ment f and called for his army to pot ' down the discontented ' Bar ons. When Uharlea I attempted to collect the ships' money in violation of the Constitution of England, and in disregard of the rich ts of the people, and was resisted, he exclaimed. "Have we a Government?" When James II wan driven from the throne of England for trampling on the liberties of the beoDle, he called for his army- and . exclaimed, 44 Let us show that' we have a Government? When George III called upon hia army to put down rebellion in America, Lord'-'North cried lusti- i'o compromise with traitors; let us dem onstrate that we have have a Government!' When in 1848, the people roe uparainst their tyrant all over Eh rope, and demanded guarantees for their rights, every crowned head exclaimed, " Have we a Government ?"; ami ap-pealeii to the army to vindicate their authority and enforce the law. Sir, the history of the world does not fail to condemn the folly, weakness and wicked news of the Government which drew i ts sword upon its own people, when they demanded guarantees for their rights. Tht-cry that we must have a Government is merely following the example 01 tne oespotted JJoyroons, who. nev er leprned anything but misfortune, never forgave an injury, never forgot an affront.' Must we demonstrate that we have a Government, and force ebedienee without reCerenc . to- th juetitce or injustice of the complaint? Sir, whenever ten millions of people proclaim to you, with one unanimous voice, that they apprehend their firesides and their family altar are in danger, it becomes a wise Government to listen to the appeal, and remove the apprehension. History does not record an example where any human Government has been strong enough to crush ten millions of people into subjectionwhen they believed their right and liberties were imperiled, without first converting the Government itself into a deepo iam and destroying the last vestige of freedom.' ' .' ! .' .- ; . . V; : Let us take warning from the examples,, of the past. Whenever a Government ha re. fused to lffiten to the complaint of ber people, and attempted to pat down their murmur bv the bayonet, they hate paid the penalty.: Of all those who listened to the people in '48, and granted charters of liberty and took . an oath to support them, only one has been faithful, and be ha been rewarded for bis fidelity. The King of Sardinia granted a Constitution, and took an oath to support it, and to-day he is King of Italy. If George the Third had listened to the murmurs of our fathers. and granted their jnst demands, the War of the Revolution would have been averted, and the blood that was spilled would have been saved. -j ' If we consider (he qnestton calmly, and make such amendments as will convince' the people of the Southern States that they are safe, are secure in their persons, in that property and in their family relations, within the Union, we can restore and preserve it. If we can not satisfy th people of the Border State that they remain in the Union, with safety, dissolution is inevitable. Then the .simple question comes back, what shall be the policy of the Union men of this country ? What man in all America, with a heart in hi bosom, who ' knows the facta Connected with Fort Sumter; can hesitate in saying that duty, honor, patriotism humanity, requires that Anderson Attd; bis band should be instantly withdrawn ? - Sir, I am not afraid to say so. ' ,"' ' . I would "scorn to take a party advantage or manufacture partisan capital out of aa act of patriotism. - . - ' . t ' ' ; PEACE is the only policy that save the country. Let peace berocJaimedju the policy, and you will find that a thrill of joy will animate the heart of every patriot in the land; confidence will be. restored; business will-be revived; joy will gladden every heart; bon fires will blaze on- every . hill .top and in the valleys ; and the Church bells will pro laim the glad tidings in every city, town and village in, America, and 'the applause of a grate ful people will greet you every where. - Proclaim the policy of war, anl there.will b a ploom and sadness. and despair pictured oa the face of every patriot in the land. - Awar of kindred, family and friend' -rather WgSinat son, mother against daughter, brother against cromer, 10 suojugat one-nan or this country into .obedience to fhe'other' half: If you dp with their prayers." tad honor him 5-witIr their I shoQtg Ofjdy. . "fk,.v-;, ' i-n ..ivirrtj t The tnilca3i& ork TrilncnA gTt e.xnrrnicytoa irWotu falsehood th : pretended wcriatioaTol: a plot tolig6rau:cltil War ttf IBe-Nbrt&irett wilVfreon wto ptorrtlthyjBVf Jet "ihern- lils Ihia tSePTtnbirledof auRfentIfea?'rIf TI7 - . m y r- - ar liar and UWXai itliairotiaeaa:' DIGlXAl?,AMlrFIlIUEIMIl. A- I ! . -1 CATT. WIUX1K im. i : : .v,,. Wjrlry-e'as; , j Skoatiar V.ilandirham and tntim. e51raUyirbTJkehllKWo; m rwdt girb:fro-tnlib-A Ihoatias raikuKBtgham mi fjneedoia , .,-, TheliBuon forever. UaerA ks, Unrrah I 1 , - twv mis vyytrossoa" - - 0 : i-TJp with the law f r.i ; . .. --. , . WhQ we rally round the lag, boys, Rally onee agala. ShohrVanAWigbamsJadfrdo : We are rallying to tfaioi&$i. .Tliree hundred theM4 inoro Show tin ValUadigfcam and fretdPm, ' a. And weH march ineolidraaks its oar fhUmif..4ioofyofii" : , ; ShputingrVsilandighaa aasj Aeedom "'' ; The 'banot-box forever, hhljah b; hurrkh'l' '' I iown with p7rteivir!i.-: .0 '. HWalls,weralIv Ue pSkWy. . - -. t1lJcf5lPr - .v'- . ShMingaUaadickAialrdo J We''wdl welcome to our nilfch :- : . The Honest, Trnt and Braver ' Shoasing Vallandigham and freedom, : ' ' Although he may h peer, 4 He shait'never b slave, : Shohfing Vallaadicham and freedom-ri; ' . ; 1 The Union-forever, )e ; - - . 77 ' So Weir harry to tne polls, boyV, - - Jfrom the Bast ad from the West, ' Bhontwg Valbindigham and freedom, .. And we'll teach oppression! efew ' " With the aiggersismt the reat, ..80, shout -VaUlandigham ad freedom, .: the Union fbtover, c ' r A PEOULAfiLY BIOHDISGUSSION. . i , i . .. 1 Tne Democratic EXeetinr at Ver , ., millioit.;iP!4o. ; ; i HON. SAM. 8, COX- IffTKTtEUPTEt) BT .AN ABOLITION D.OCTQjjrjLOK" OBKRUN. Oox Questions liiSpUnid Polit ical l-ilt-Flenfy W Fvm - : From the Erie County (Ohio) .JTews, Augrt S. S. Cox on. the Beaexra Hie Speech at VermillioiLrrHis dtwith the Ober Un : Doctor Corriea JH&i Down and haa Him Buried on titer Lake Shore, r . Many of our readers do najr know' that qbite a number of Republicans wefvat the Demo cratic meeting at Vermin ionin lhe 7th.inst. x ui crowa, as we nave, nerftoiore saul, .was immense : and in a WesternVReserve countv. only a few miles from the seat of Abolitionism, Oberlin, it could not well betotberwise than that. h goodly ami godly apriakHng of fanatics were on hand, lpough wexdo. not suppose they, would average one to every . hundred in attendance: .The Republican. IWwever,' be- ing'astonishel at tbeturn Otki claimed that many of their party attended tbb' meeting. If this is the fact, we failed tadiacover them, as all, with one exception, obred the speakers, and appeared to JUsv-. at!fioiai' ! - . ; W hen Mr. PeDdletoo spoke; a certain learn ed Doctor (Biglpw, we believe hi name is)' of Ubehn;, began, as VP expresses rt, "to pro- peouod interreocatortes," fie tried some doz en on the Cincinnati Congressmen, who deftly drew him out into the admission that he didn't want the . old Union with slavery. After hr bad been lashed into seemine rood order by .Mr. Pendleton, he again essayed to " propeound" while Mr, Cox was speakiag. The surgical operation by which his hide wa taken. off and hia fleah Iarcerated, and hia bones pounded in a mortar, ha never had a parallel ia this part of Ohio, We ararequested. a Secretary and repor ter of the meeting, to give a sketch of the performance: but-ao pen can picture iC .Thaim- oiense crowd of German, which Mr.' Dresset bad been addreeingr adjourned and helped to eweu iti nia meeung ; and the .assemblage ror pize, Kr animaupn, tor- toe, place . (00 - u take shore, in a beautiful grove.) jwa one rare Jbr thie part of Ohio. .The Oberli. Doctor was a'severe looking man, with iron' gray hair and 'beard. He carried a sbeavv :cane.' with-which hi proped op a heavy- chin : 'and heseented as definn( as Don Quixote, and aa sanctimonious aa Praise God Barebonea. -T When. Mr. Cox betran be took un a position immediately beneath Wm ', the crowd pressed-up close) and at the -first fire all became eager to near, the targe etaM "waa immediately overcrowded with people.'" ' ' v ; : v axr. vox waa aec taring tnat, nowever wrong and disloyal Democrats, might be, it dHi not become the Western Reserve Republicans to reproach them. He would take no lessons of patnotietn from " saeh seditions -' people. 'He woohl not call wames : at would leave that to his opponents. If.heaid that th Republi can of the Reserve were Abolitionists, nulli- rJers and secessionist, be would prove it ; and by their own' testimony. If he could not convince them of; the virtu of Democracy, he' would at least close -their owo Pharisaical cant about the Union. The person, said Mr. Cox, ho has been interrupting Mr: Pendleton, does not know, perhaps, that he has been singing over arrd over again Greeley's song about the flag? Teer down the litnating lie, . ' .-: iiait ac the etarry tag, ' Insult no shining sky ' With bate's polluted rar. For my friend, Mr. Pendleton, marrieif a daughter of the poet Key! who wrote the Star Spangled Banner., f Cheers.) W have- the old flag on our aid ilaaghterl ami thia dicf- pe of Greeley can't tear it down, even in this Reserve'.f' I do not know who this, maligner of our party, ji ; but lwill 'wager eojaething that he ia frbha Oberlin. ' " - 4 . ! Several 'Voices You're right. " He ' is one of tho saint.'?. - ILaughtr.r ' I Mr. Cox I will show yoa that, if he ..be hoDesthe is a disunionist. If be will give. me bis attention a moment, he will se himself in a mirror. Yon beliete, sir,-i a Wendell Phil' lip, '4ont-'yoar - ' .-.; : - i Dr. RigkwT-,Yet,ir; aad I ca handle yoa ataiiy.time .a ' Mi, CoiWelt Vdtt wnt ee a-boot .that .when wW'get tbrough VJudgiiig byJ th way yorforeheadrejre so Rapidly, t bat handled your befterr.i'A faugh. 1 Wendell Pbil-lpaaaid iUntU lS4lV we thohgkt Irpossltl if kill slavery and aax (ha UniWalhen Midvprer, rwnafihmer stna ue,A nqn m to pnix max t ireedom.T- loafT . a w.er-.m BxiOPn dra wsion JtolLr pendTpiihat jroo are aot for thaoId-XInroa TM hsvs kTba hn bir!a!.Uaa "IT w TMone5t1JT, on.ao. not: want Ood ' 4 Mr. Yootarefor oukJ deetroy Ui Uaion J ilr. Cax-r-Zrhtn roa ef commute with iEwr? i 'i DrBliwond xnak &tber-ibaoTa wiit alavebolder. Wha.i hre'yow then bot a diaunionUt. fCheer. -:You area twin broth- . w m . w r w . 1 a ertoyjerx. jyavip. r iMugater, A you,,. nay from Oberlin, you no dbtabt' joined with ."tbe other saint in commemorating John Brown's death, o the dartPakd etbrtny 23 .tfpceav ber, 1859, when Virginia hune him aadaelit bis soat 00 tfee downward xnarcb... iLaugh ter.r When Spaulding, 'Riddle. BTerce. Til- den. Wolcott. and tour Ret. Brewster. " arid your n'egrb orator LaTSgston,' deified th horse-thief marauder and murderer, you were there, t doubts not. , .. .r.-r j. . t)r. ft. aasenled.' '': ' ' . -Mr, i'oX You shouted when Laneston said t " Bat w'hy; preserve tbUakaj siacwita only olaect ie W eternalize slavery 1 : Such .a Uatoa is not wort bT perpetaatiaz. v With all mt heart, I should say, let it be aboliahed. I bate the Union of these states, as I hate the rferifc-fbr bV U I'araPbereft,o1 everv riht a a citizen, and denied all protection for toy' per-sohal:lUerty'i .011 yeapersonal liberty wa a great thing for negroes, When you defied the ' Constitution : but it is a poor thing for a white man like Vallandtehatn.: when the ' Constitu tion is outrazed. Langston, your disunion ne- gro,,ia,.raiflipg regiments of blacks to fight now, and Mt. VaNandigbam is in exile" because he loved the Union better than even his Own personal fre10ftt.n-iA t th ia -Barfl e hrteti n g of your Reserve disunionist and I read it from a. pamphlet, printed by . your fjienda it Was resolved (paie 8) that 1" in such a contest. and ujider such, a dire, necessity,-we 'aay.Jet irrtxjuui niaiMi, iiougrr ire union- 00 OiSSOlV-edi" The dire necessity was the choking? 4f Joha Brow nr. t Because Virginia did that, you 1: '.T .'tt ...... -r , - wuuiu not iitb wun ner in. toe union. 1 guo-mit it to tou, now. whether you did " not de serve bis fale ?': f Cheers. I " Xou eee. sir. that L prove all I say as I go along. ' .- . . Nqwj to npve jpa, a Seceionist,vI hat here a speech of President Lincoln, printed by himself, at the.office Qf J. AG. S. tlideon, m reference to the President' Messace.' " It was detitered January 14, 1848. On the. eighth page he declared, that "any people, any wherev being inclined, and having the power, have the right to. rise up and.shake off the existiiiff Government; and form a "new one thaf . suits th em better. Any portion of such people may revolution tze and make their own of so much of the territory as they inhabit." . Yon votei for Lincoln I .Did you approve of that doc trine? Twill prove that tou did, for yoasuD ported the men who plotted, bv violence." to nullity and -overturn the Federal authority in Ohio. '--'-"," ':' .v-: ; This people will remember the .Wellington rescue ; cases. A batch ot revolutionists of Oberlin strove. tobak 4fown the Federal authority right here. This man before me may have helped to rescue tb.e negro boy Jon n from United States officers." . He is a pretty person to callon 'othe'rs to Biippbrf the Feder al Government; lBghter.j: These Oberlin rescuers were tried, convicted, and about to be sentenced by the United State Couit at Clete- land, wnen a meeting was caned at Cleveland, to revolutionize and by violence overthrow the Federal power. ;; They sought, like South Car olina, the agency of the State to do it. The Republican Governor,-Chase, and hia Attor ney General helped it on I have the account of that meeting a Republican paper. Here it is I I Here Mr. Cox held up the Ohu State TrmrnAl of. May 26, 185Q, pretty .well worn.l It has seen some ser'vicfe,tRis paper: a little the worse for wearike: the Republican par- sy; daughter. 1 : ; ., .. ! . : : Dr.- U, Let, me see it, i you. nieaee. J Mr- cox nanaeit it to uie JJoctor. . lie , Jopked it orer, wiped titar specks .'and pronounced it genovme. j . Mr. 'Cox Tbisi paper save, there were ten or twelve thousand Republicans from, the, Re serve present. No , doubt Oberlin was there. Laughter.! Ferbap you were there, air.-Dr. B 1 was, and an bfond of it. , Mr. Cox And yoU aprwoved of their action and Uieir resolutions f .. Dr. B. Ye, sir j.Tdo, and did, ' , Mr. uox Now, 1 have you. If I do. not prove you to- b. a seCesaiOnist, revolutioniet and niuJifierir. then there: is no truth in youiC own statement. : l r, ad farther that this vast meeting marched, into Cleveland with banners, with feVofuthmary devices and music. John Brown had not then Leen'hung,' else they would have sung hia'rharch, instead of plav- Migthe Marseilles." . .Old men were put at the 1 . .fil. r 7.1 a . . iieaa.ot ine prpaeesion,. wiia. nnge, imprinted with "uo." lhen came the Loraine Coun It deleeation tffvr crowd, sir, of mobocrats against the Union. You were in-; it.- Per haps you carried the banner : Inscribed" Lo- raine ot) one side, and on the other Here is the Government : Let tyrants beware.w Do you remember that ? You .do. Well. where, waa 'the Government t It was not then iii the Administration oh I no you had not .1: T 1 l ; yi l' - . : . men got Lincoln ana a is vaoinei at rvasn-ington. ' "Here is th Government"-- in this mob of Jaw-haters and higher law revolutionists! -Here is tiie power to overthrow and de stroy. What a commentary I .; We Democrats said then, as.now that the Government is not in men;- not in mob at Uberlin,- nor asents at Washington ; but in the Coneliution. f Cheer.! We at. let ttrants .beware who vl oh t to ;overn mental chart. Cheers. W say auiud by the Government ajrainst mobs in Ohio, in 1859, Or in NeW -.-York city in 1863 against usurpations of State authority in 1859, 6rof Federal authority in 1863. 1 Cheer. 1 ; Yet it ia the Democracy, that is reproached as j 1 1 1 . , . . , ujaioTai vj eucn scum oi seamon as noated to the - surface then; and 'has floated ever SHtce. . '-. '. - ' . This meeting; waa a typexf the Republican party. It followed Lincoln's doctrioe. Eve ry prominent Republican in Ohio was there, in person or by' letter. .' You, my7 sweet evangelical friend, voted for one of the Committee on Resolution. Mr. ' Blake,: and inaae him Congressman. Chase approved by speech. and fennison oy letter, ol the meeting and its objects. Giddinga 'was 'Prei lent. Perhaps yon hat:heard of him. --- ; ' ' Dr. B.t. A nobler man does' pot Jbreath. & ' Mr. Cox No donbt you a pproved; ofhis course. He told Mr. Ewing.- in : his letter, of the 7th "of Notember. I860, that when -,h VheM ob to tb-"BpobHcans; the 'humbug of oiesoroTion, tnat ne was-a cowaru, ana an nn- virilamrnuMvoI ta1a power you tbeazht him a prophet. When be advised ymt,.to shoot down United State office., with warrant .for fugitive slaves, as pirates, yew f hAttvhtlftm fc'hwat natrlot."' T7hn htAii fied the b&tiabei arfa,' aiitt ; tb gnarn-tk for tbabxry ifl negroea,Ma.yo4 party despises habeas cerpw outra reraonal freedom tar hit oen and, tm jh penury of an Ohio Governor, permit afwhita nan to be banished, not for Crijiie.'bat for'bre ventton ' ,You thmk yoo : hfghrln ?yotfrtoyaltf that all l)emcratii are 'Copperhead traitcrs. (Cheers. So much 4br-GiWijr nvf tLln civiam hd Utrshkai- yeri fcJJuwed WL eUa were f th i retotjpnarye-jin tjt tore, to revolutionize portion.- rcr? the r9s-cla aealnst th Federal Oprer ;.U4htfviler 1 th Coramitteo L-isolaliouai B.F. T7J. Morrrp,wCpaTiciI al.J4amixtA) oiittOaiow aad a reotlea ; Conrraaemaa 1 Bmcc JBegjablican ejt JSnia P ia Hitflheoeki Repobjioari, Seaatok Xltnuaant worwrtiqrira iwiit;xfiiil nut oiuc u ucn. lue wnoie nepuniicaa party were tme-represeated. f-p. KrOtrter, one 01 .incoin s appointee jp a a'sageanip at wasnington, antra loud union man now ; Root, ot sandtisjtvi DeJano,xf Moonuyemo. who pretend to be shoekedal-trakoV now; Jridee Spauldinr iheiaYdaodConxreesman : V President Aa Mahant Pf Oberlin andjJthers. 1 inj1ntitkfr) thJ intfitsKtWwi . t. a oa a orasor iot otaos: xroope--aad Governor Chase. These were the!; truxopeU. of sedition, whoae voice Inspired the revolutionista.. One saidr -r'Ohip shall,. not, iu God'e', name,,, she shall not be md if hunting ground lor elate catchers." "You applauded that. .Dr:B:aseotedi;? -.-;57 M"r. Cox He said : "Stand steadv. trust in God and keep your powder dry,' and look for the things thaithaffit" -You .bad drv now- der too. f Laughter Chase mad ball cartridge at Oolumbuav The thitir that -ehoald be have since been John Brown, revolution I and bloodj wa for tEe nerroH Another Batlt l "Ler the CederI auhprUy mnk tie ie Ad test the fact whether tee uruY execute our laws-Ther know jiot how soon the smouldering Vol cano will urst; under their rottep jcarcasaee And you applauded tEatJ and now have the jngid coolness and brazen' effrontery to appear among us and taiic. a voq,dul to MrvPendlav ton. about dialoval DerrsVeata: fObsm l Wn . - - - - - ' - - It J . . -iuj nui.i,cocrTc-pc xinnrori -x .oescow, oniy that ypu are a type of a class or slanderers. You approved of the reaolfttiona, "Declaration of Independence,'' as it waa called. You confeseed that. Do you remember them. Here is one": "Thai the enforcement of such las (as the Fugitive Slave against an unwilling people, is productive only of evils threatening the pubiia.order and th stability of governmental institut ions." You hurrahed for that ? What now of the ' Conscription Law ? LAaghter.J. mSome ace.unvyllino; tQ go to war. r That law Corn pels; -you would not em force it hey ? Laughter. What a beautiful specimen of a copperhead! Laughter. Dp you approve of thafr-dwloval resolution ? You are all at once dumb. " Cheera.T" You were, very fond-of ialkine. all ., dat. Your speech was exceedingly free. Your internied-dlingin this meeting like the intermeddling fgenerally of your claBs was tery unpleasant y, disorder I y and conapicipue. uWhy don't you answer now ? Cries of "Hit him again" "Bully for Cox" "He's nothin? but a darned nigger thief." ' I do not make any personal attacks on him. He may have been a nigger thief ; no doubt lie and. his superiors have been makinz trouble bv- their inTermed- dling politics for th irty years : but he is. dumb as an oystet now.; - Won't you-pleas say. now do whether you still favor that resolution. " Just nod; yes or no. Not a nod. Laughter. I am sorry I closed : vou un so quickly. rLaugh'ter; Well, the Democracy say :let all laws be obeyed;'Cpqscrii)lion Law jt ugiuicKi rmw am ait wneiner we lute them or not till they are-'adjndicated to be void, or repealed. by:utatCirJhra.l We fought all iawleeneee and mob in 1859. a we denounce them jio.w, W stand by the Federal Union in 1803 as we 'did inlSi9,when in is genueman ana otner were. A Voice DoVt caTT him a gentleman! H once said he would b willing to hate a negro to marry one of hi ,daughtre."There,a. a rouDg man here that is ready, to swear he uearu n. jauater.j - ... , loung man xes, i oe. Mjiieers aud iaughter. - - t ' .' ' .Mr. Uox Never mind that, That is a do- - -; ' a mesuo matter ana connected more with taste than politic. Laughter.! I said I wonl, prove thia Uberlia vanzelist to be s Sucm ion ist. What els do J eff. Davis and hia confederates hold; but that tbey will ribt have United estates laws enforced on-an Vnnwillino- peoole?" .'Tliia Lincoln's doctrine of 1848; 'and these Resrve disorganize re. ; aidl by Chase, Delano. Denison A Co.. hav been' the frienda and aiders oT Secessionists: fpr thet sDorueu iue pretext ana gave tne. provocation to Southern revolt.' Cheers. " Consult1 the ordinance or secession ' and Judge' Brinkerhofr dissenting opinion in the maoeaa cvrjm rase irom-uoeriin, and yoa- will find this nullification doctrine laid down" al most as recorded in thia Republican platform, It is the Mates rights Calhoun doctnn inten sified and enlarged far beyond what Madison ever dreamed, and far beyond what Democrat ever dreamed when tbey used it in their plat forms. Madison never proposed to make nni lification or secession the remedy for any griev ance: oui nis i-emeay. was,- a out is, ander the Constitution, and by its amendments.- This was and is Democratic doctrine. But Abolition made itself a secession did,' the sole judge; above the Supreme Court, above all Federal authority, of all the mode and measures of redree. Hence when this man before me approved this heresy, he became the twin brother of Jeff. Davis. Laughter and cheers I do not know which is the meanest ; revolu tion ny secession and war or revolution Insid lously by -violent Abolitionism -and Oberlin ethics. But until both heresies are expunged from the American mind," peace and good will will never return. At this time part of the 'stand gave way, in consequence of its being "orer crowded." and itnt to mt grouna. r orranareijr no on wa seriously injured, although . Mr. Pendleton's son was considerably bruised hy others falling on nun, ju.r. ox ana your report erer. being light weight " remained above.. During tne conmsion tne uneriin Evangelist slipped on, ana was seen no mere.; Air. HJOX SOpn re sumed, and closed his speech amid rreat en thusiasm. ' SucH a lesson to Oberlin was much needed.' 7 1 was given with good hnmor, and will long be remembered by the "saint" and others present. ; ' ; ;; ; Edward Ererett'a Soni Hot in the ' " r:: ' "' Rank. .. ; 1 A parairrabb ha been iwtie the ronnda ts ting that Edward . Everett' two. son.; who 1iaveeen drafted in Boston,: wr roier into the" field. This is not tle case. .They - both paid the $300 ePminntation. Cia Cbwt, '.' Sucli'war-ahriekeraa Mr. EtxarrT "destre etery body 1a'8oo''lo go Jnto the arrby but their own.' Xn : this connection Veat baee mm) the followiBgr- r tOatawf Bidc-Ua anywIatnV country to tjtiti aoout the -wir, atid now that ;tfi w -. . . . t . . . . ' ... . 1 vaiian-.XavjUOveseZ. Tl z iiar8 4 aii. KwvjKe rac: tauttmci AS lWArPhTafpipatiism araoirjAhe &ttc6nttpte it6 pa!3 IE comma UUjqd is naa cota tu song reroa IP Chtla it I CS. is,;:uJroj3 rrttrJ ."5ffie 'nU 3ye4 r. t vr i n it'-'.iii.-.'ii.tt 1 1- mriiw AAu.y c 01 1. 1 f-i rJTte Oca CJ IaTjuid'ha'ci'. 2artl Urtr?m iair tier br Jt fewslr-f U,wiFrehiake eif ri j cr deaci ed XXiobigair. High-haaded Ontragi at the Prorcri Maiilxaicaa-Xiraaa ty Lahet:ea lit Dare radc AaIa Tetttifatioa Dexaaade'Cr CpUulrrkUelk -witeJI IiTj !titJtO yeaterdayby report of a biliucmiad oatrare committed on the person' of a mn, named Joseph Ilap.ate Protoat Oljalaeft on Fourth-street. From all we can learn eo ceming the matter, it would appear that Ha-ren enlisted some tim ago in the Sixty'-third Regiment, and deserted- A few days sine, it is alleged, b offere himself aaybstirf for a citizen of the First Ward", who waa a worn in and sent, ta camp. He remained but a abort tim in" camn. and nothing mrr- ras llieardof him until yesterday; when: -a . la al- .- leged, he.preseated ftiulelf t be Provost Marshal's office, as a adbstUo.t lor a man who had juat.beU JbimO. ,,2s i , atat-;? ment of th Clerk in the olSce themelvea, but whetherjk it correct or not w caanotsay., " Hagen had passed examination and was about JSeing sworn in the second time, when he was recognized,; whereupon ordera" .were- giveo. tofl-take him up stairs and ffiv AimJifyl aeA asT punishment for his attempt to impose- npon th Boarl, Our information doe ot state" precisely from whom this order emanated,-bat:, as Captain-Poster wa present anl either gar it himself, or heard it siren, bai of eoursfc. muet be hoJJ-respoDiibl. -. . -. .-- xiagen was bow seized by the guard and ta. sen to in -renaeztous". in th third arorr. where preparations were at "once made" for ear-rying the order into effect.'' Th ' man a w - are informed waa striped nakedw gaged and sK handcuffed. A raw cowhide was procued,' . T and a' soldier named Georce Palmer, corrjoral- of the guard, under direction of Deputy Pro: tost Marshal MeHeury, who wa present prd ceeded to lay oath stripe.- Hagen; compare itively powerless though he was, resisted -and McHenry, a is alleged, called on the oldir present to ho'd hira - while1 the stripes wer reing laid on. This the latter rfued to da. " whereupon as the report goes, McHenry -hini-- d pelf seized th wretched man, and held .hiwL until the entire fifty lashes were admihistttti:, Hagen struggled violently in his agony, but . before the sentence was half carried out'hc felt prostrate 00 the floor, andJwhU in this coo '" dition the balance of the lashes wer admin?- tered him. His condition when taken up wa pitiable in the extreme. Hi back s Hire" a piece of raw beef, the cowhide having cut r through the skin, and he wa - o exhaoated that he could not support himself.. A geDtle man who saw him. to-day, 'while th doctor '. was dressing bis woonde, sutes that he moat """' ; have received a most shockin florahov a! - that bai he not been a man of strooe conti- tntion be would h ve died under; th iasio tion. -. '. ' ' ' "" ' An outrage SO bieh-hinded aa the above has" ? seldom been com nail ted in ant - commanitr; and it is due to the public that tb GOver-- ment promptly repudiate th action of it ofl- cers in the matter, by the dismissal or euspen- . sion from all concerned. The Conaerintionr -rtf- Act.: Heaven knows, i un popular enonghi without bringing it into the odiam which-. higbdyiBdedaxtsof 'lilaiifff-tllH lLj'LUi" are calculated to create, and" It behoove the-Govarament, thenrto b carefal how It n. t ploys men to execute the law whoa course b. - gets but irritation, and complaint, where mod- eration andonciliation are required. W do' not. of oonrser justify, or pretend to justify,; 4 Hagen conduct. Th law. civil or military ? permits-no sucb sever? and barbarous punish ment as flogging on the bar back, but en if v5 it did, and no matter how guilty the man'may tf have been, jhe Provost Marshal had no rfghf "" to take that law in hia own hands, and hlr"" doing so wa-entirely gratuiiouBi oer-hi- part.C Hi business was. to have reported the -man Mf a deserter, And then let a court-martial deal 'i with him as his' case miht deserve. Thi'1 roatter-i talked of a good deal oat of door it day, and some anxiety is expressed . to learn r s what tepe, jf any, te Secretary of ; War-willr take when he hear of th affair. Of coure great latitude will be allowed General Moore-5 head's appointee, but if an outrage so waotoo" " " and tyrannical aa this is orerlooked. there is no telling where tb thine may atopi or what may come from it. Pituhurg Evening Chron-' icle, August 4th. - - --- - - 7 ' WiieonainV Th Wisconsin Democracy bad a targe and earnesrState Con vention at Milwaoke on the fa 5th inst., Hon. If. SvOrton being Preshlenf ,7 thereof.; The ' following noralea'tion yre're ' 9 -made;?: -' , - ' . - '- "i ; PorOoternor, Henry IX Palmer.- ; ' For, LieateaantrGovernor, Ex -Governor' ' Dewey. . . .. . ;, 4. -4 n v .v.,'.. For Sacretary of Stat, Emil RotbeV ". t. For Treasurer, Charles 15. Benton. . For A ttorney General, Eieazer WaEeley. The ticket is a trog on,'combining aa thV ' Mjiwaukee Xews remark, " mpr ability ex- ' " perienc in publld afTaif Afirft htr' 1 character than any other ticket erer placed irf - 15 Th resolution vera ai- follows .. I; Mesolvedf That ws reaffirm' ,tnl svlopi tb? t axldresa issued ly the Stat -Convention hL September 3d 1802, a hdjth resolution of the 1 Mas Convention -beI.lTat"tlfilwake. . Joa 25. 1863. a the settled dAtftri crade party of thie St it.' ?- . " . Jietotved, Thai w hail wrth delight aorpe - inanifeetaiion pf a desire on th nart Jt iKi ; people of eoro of the seceiline States to return a totheir aliegiancetdthe Union, and heAA ii to be th doty of the Administration cordially to co-operate with th peopf of oeb Sater' ri for. tbeir restoration to the Union with .11 iKW ', gnaraatees of their righu and iatereate coe- Miin-u in u constitution. . . "" Besotted. That whilr s"wmM ii' draw onr armies from tKt flcM.,mii. ..M. ner recpgntx lb so called Cob fed R , yet if such, maaifeetation aboa Li ' eral throughout th eoeded State, we beliere" c that the ofSce ef peace should 'sDnereed tboa of war, and. that it wonld to anch Tat b th duty f the Admtawtratioa age tb holdmg of a COTstltrtlonal Convention ' ot all the state to rMtotw-peaca, maiaUla ib tniojtaAjgopxiartth Constltation, - l t It was not TTotl. C .1 VaT!-T-4,- . i. - tiade vct the Ibliowln- Ianrnar. btil tzsZ ' : P.1- Wade f - i' ; : - . " t Tc cannot fbreaiT men In (kitfV '--T ... fb tb ftttemrt Id 0 aolk seem to ff-r- ! i 1 " sbbVert th"rt:prtaeiprekjd,4j3vcr3 t : tlerwhlcli .Anfn wsasaerf it wsa mtA .1?'. fa . j-. 1 . . , . ' . nam, oui io wad. wtKirj - cam daonc4a a-c-war . dxel, -whorTft-strtlie"-. " irfj'fc fcrocfitit C- affT.l ttSh-f!rr-r . - . tOr; i4n!r "til Piils f . T l-rThad?fi rerlhie u.. sy.j-ra A 1 11 11 si. - 5 1

-.--: r -.- , ...... ''-.:. 31 1" i. U'Jolf.2 si - V7 t? rv r.-r . "v-d - 3 W V: ;j.v 'Ci.T Jt4 1 3 ' .A ;i if i if ii y i j i ii ii c if x -v .si r. - ."X. a flee in Wm1w1 Blolt, 8d 8 tor. - . . . : .. . .. Tltftva. Two DoITm Dr Aannoi. vaTkblia Tiupj$2.50 within liX noatka; $3.00 ifUr thi xpl (Tnna Um New York Metropolitan Keeord. THE MEIf JFOB OHIO, , A CAMPAIGN BONO. An " Watl w A Wbh. Com, toaniM, yor Toloee, And theat alovd fof Val, And tow tht our next Oorotmor - - Ho must bo Mid ho shall. Oh! wont old Abo furious, And wont Burn vide look blno, - When they find that wo'ro oloctod - Vallaudigbam and Pnghf Tho men for Ohio, - Tho moo lor Ohio, Tallandigham and Pack. Thoy think to oTorawo us. They think they'll crash sts yt, "Bot wo Westerns aro tho tonghost too The Liaeolsiitos bavo mot. Wo laugh at aad defy their threats, Wo care not what thoy do, Bot we're fcoond to have elected YaUandigbam and Pngh. , . Tho men for Ohio, The men for Ohio, , Tho men for Ohio. Vallandighaai and Pagh. ' Oh ? brethren don't forget that time, When Barnsido was oar fate, And laws were superseded By order Thirty-Eight. Then, like a freo bora Western man, - Onr Vol spoke bold and trao ; Oh ! when he's rhosen Gorernor What will poor Bornsidodof " Won: be skedaddle, W.,n he ke l-ddle, W. nt he skedaddle. As he's well used to do ? - Tbey eall ns traitors," "copperheads, " We care o't tho' bey do v . But they'd ) es' D"t tread on cupcrLds, Or they will surely m. If they rouse us "they'll wake up aaks" Believe it Sr it's true; So they'd bettor fall into our ranVs And rte fur Val and Pugh. The n.eii ror Ohio, . The men f r OLio, ' The men for Ohio, . . Vallandigbam una lugb. The Disunion Candidate Defines His Position. John Brough, the abolition disunion candi- date lor uorernor ot unto, cornea out ooiuer i a f yv " . . a. - t. t 1 in hia treason than many of his lollowera. In his speech at Marietta h said : For I, for one, spurn the- Crittenden resolutions, and T do it for the reason that the first gun fired upon Snmpter relieved us " from the thraMotn of slavery; and I never desire to ee peac . tt 'rMLwith ihif jnatitntin reiuta-ted . - - - ' - In his Cleveland speech he was still more explicit. Upon that occasion he used the following language; "Fcr many years you are aware, I have held ideas of a conservative character on tfaia slavery question. I have changed my view. I now see the impossibility of permanent suc cess in onr renublic as looeaa any portion of It is afflicted with the leprous disease. Either slavery must be torn out, root and branch, or our Government will exist no longer." . So Johnny Brough wanted the war to abolish slavery, nor is he willing the war shall cease or the States be re-united under the Constitution until slavery is in someway abolished. What a vile traitor he is; Against the Bestoration of the Union. Fornxt's Philadelphia Press commences a Late article thus: "Ho matter what may be the condition or the terms -of re-union, the honor and &ith of the North, the victories of our armies, the struggles we have undergone, the sacrifices we have made, the hopes that we give to the future, all demand that there thall be no resto ration of the American Republic without freedom a the corner ttone. ' So if the South should offer to come , back into the Union as it was before the war, the door of reconciliation is closed upon her .- The war, according to Formey, is to be kept up for that for what? For the freedom of the negro t - Twenty Dollars Reward. The Abolition papers parade the following remark of Mr. Vallahdioham, and represent it a Having oeen made since toe commence ment of the rebellion : . "Then, sir. I am not a Southern man either. although irrth if most unholy and unconstitu tional eruat'ie against the ISouth, in the must of the in vaun arson, insurrection and .murder to which she has been subject, and with which she is still threatened with the torch of the incendiary1 and the dagger of the assassin suspended over her. my most cordial sympathies are wholly with her' . - , We will pay any man twenty dollars who will show its any letter or speech of Jlr. Val- LANBiQBAk's in which this language is used other than in, his speech delivered in Congress on the 15th of decern ber, 1850, against the JeA Baowis rauf n to'Virginia. omci Far-mar. - I Woe Unto the Bad Hen I ' .The indictment now pending before1 the people Of Qhio against Abolition rule contains these charges: : . , . : :.; "... That it baa trampled our State Constitution usder foot ;.-s-.v-- ,-. That it has eoapended our State laws j ."- That it haa readered our iStat Court and Jadzee powerleee i m ' j i -; . . . That it har teixed oar eitixeni; imprison ed and baaiahed them without ktue proceea of - Jaw.' r.i-.i t.i-i 9ri That H haa overawed 4h Legislator by the ayoas .a.'jfi: m.r'i.tr viiu:: ? And thoU it luuf atteta peed to array 4ha eoli diers we foraisbed to putldewBrtha eebeUioa agamat the loyal cstiseaa who furnished ibem, f Ja deadly eeUt.7WeowXteiir.. . ABI(MAiaTALN.-ATJn nAMiV nrrr T-n 55i?!ELI?TJETENT. TI1E..CONSTI- 7H1CH IHiVEjfiWfjRn rrt .cnoono? I ' DOS. SIWDEX .U. DOCGL SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, He declares War to be Disunion. He AdYoc&tet Peace the- Oalj Policy . That . Will Lead ta Union. P&OFZXSSZO V7AJLU1XIQ, UcIiFCrcd 13thornrch,18Cl. The following extract ia from the last speech Mr. Douglas made in the United State Sen ate, and the closing official act of hia life. Thus far, his prophetic warnings have proved true. Bead and ponder them, fellow citizen : We are told that the President is soinir to enforce the law in the seceded 6tates. . How? By oeitinr out the militia and ueine the armv aari navy.. These term are used a freely and as flippantly as if we were a military Government, where martial law-was the only rule of action, and the will of the monarch wasxhe only law on the subject. Sir, the President can not use the army or the navy for any purpose not authorized by law. What is that? If there be an insurrection in any State against the laws and authority thereof, the President can use the military to put it down only when called upon by the dtate Legislature, if it be in wesaion, or if Hcan not be convened, by the Governor. He can not interfere except when requested. If, on the contrary, the insurrection be against the laws of the United States, instead of a State, then the President can use the military as a paste cktv-t in aid of the marshal in euch cssee as are eo extreme that jictal authoi iiy and the powers ot tho marshal can not put down the obstruction. The military can not be used in any case whatever, except in aid of civil process to assist the marshal to execute the writ. I shall not quote the law on the sul.jeot, but if the gentlemen will refer to the acta of 1795 and ll8, they wiil find that hy the act of 179.J the niiJitia only could be railed out to aid in the enforcement of the laws when resisted. -to.t-uch an extnt that the marshal could riot overcome the obstruction, Bythe act of 6i', the President ia authorized to use the army and navy to aid ia enforcing the. hwfl in uJl canes where it was before lawiui to Ute the militia. Hence, the military power, no matter whether naval or regulars, volunteers or militia, can te used only in atii of tit civil auihorities. . Now, sir. how are you going to create a case in one ot thu&e seceded States where the Prea- M'01 wa8 authorized to call out the military ? You must rust procure a writ from the judge describing the crime; you roiwt place them in the hands of the marshal, abd must meet such obstructions as render it impossible for him to execute it; and then, and not till then,- can you call on the military. Where ia roar judge in the seceded States ? s Where is your marshal? You have no civil authorities tbercaad, the Preside, in him inaugural, tells you he does not intend to appoint any. He said he intended to use the power confided in htm to collect the revenue, but beyond that he did not intend to go- You are told, therefore, in the inaugural, that he is going to appoint no judge, no marshal, no civil officers in the seceded States that can execute the law, and hence we are told that he does not intend to use the array, the navy, or the .militia, for any such purpose. . . is it your purpose to rush this county blindly into war at a coat of $400,000,000 per annum i. to levy $200,000,000 direct taxes upon the people, and then call npon them to pay it because you have involved us in civil war? Sir, I expect to stand by my country tinder all circumstances, and hence I will aaveier, if I can, from being plunged into civil war of in definite duration, that ; will require a quarter of a million of -men and exorbitant taxation, levied on one half of the American people, to subdue the other half. . Remember this extraordinary amount of revenue, these extraordi-n f numbers of men, are to be called for in eighteen States to fight fifteen ; for it is useless to disguise the fact, that whenever you make the question one of peace or war the slavehold-ing States will be a unit, and will be fifteen against eighteen. Are we prepared for civil war with all its horrors and calamities?. I repeat that it is time the old line of policy was adopted, and that the country knew it. In my opinion, we must choose, and that promptly, between one of the three lines of policy. . - . ' .. 1. Thjj restoration and preservation of the. Union by such amendments to the Constitution, a3 will insure domestic tranquility ; safety and equality of all the Sta'es, and thus restore peace, unity and fraternity to the whole country ; or, . , ; 2. A peaceful dissolution of the Union, by recognizing the independence of such. States as refuse to remain in the Union without such constitutional amendment and the establishment of a liberal system of social and -com mercial intercourse with them, by treaties of commerce ana amity ; or, 3. War, with a view of subjugation and military occupation of those States which have seceded or may secede from the Union. . I repeat, that, in my opinion, you must adopt and pursue one of thee line of policy. The sooner yon choose between' them and proclaim your choice to the. country., the better for you. the better for us, the better for every friend of liberty and constitutional government throughout the' world. . In . my opinion, the first proposition is the best, and the last is the worst. , " I am in favor of such amendment, to the Constitution as will take that question; out of Con gress and restore peace, to the country That may' be done by non-intervention by popular sovereignty, as it is called, or by the Crittenden amendment making., an equitable partition of the territory, between the twoaeo-tiona, witb a self-execuUng clause prohibiting it on one aide and protracting it qn th other. st may o oone in .various ways. I prefer euch peaceable disunion time to civil amendment at will beetttUfacwJry' fey VirwltTta, North Carolina, Tenpessee, ad .other border u Bu,- pq paciocauon wojca will satisfy thera' will create a Uni6n party in the Cotton Slate which wRl soou eiabraoe a larg majority of the peopl' ia tho StaXeav andbnjitbeta b.4t.tlwr.owiuree-rWia an4, accord,. and io doing tthuav refton, strengthen and.rjernetnat thm. AmM U F jMTV y:b4t4?er-r ew..wMVswwyA Maryiaiuir and .the , Border etJrteUtJ ow fa ik, fraim) it a Union party ia the seceded tatc that will bring thenLbdr.bjhjL InvolajitarV" ao-tion 50C t)fawwtXoopiirtXoti iiyeat anfiperre the. Oon rwrttM.uij vi,fii.viaM7n3i.ff ftif K-i :'i L AU 0 VMUlHUilf t AUMU IMl'T m -U N lU U(T' Will COL WPT NAL, ETERNAL SEP ABATI02J ! I Haae,' CBN AL SEPARATION 1 1 H&e,Tar liar and Ubalara trliaUuV'3 dicguiaa it a Jo jmajv every Uaipn. 10 in America rnnst, advocate, such amepwents to the'CoosUtntion as.will preaerve peace and r- lore me . ujiivo ruus ieiri (jibubwdS waether .openly,' or . secitlr' plptUng Js destruction, is the advocate of Deacefursece&siOn. pr.of WAR, as the surest means b''" renderfpgl reunion ana reconstruction, 11 trvtS)) ijtiii, I have too. much respect ' for 'hia , intellect 'la oeiieve, ror one nonicBi, iotiqcre, 10 a man - Hence.-1 do not. mean, if i. can. pre vent it. that tbesnemiea of the .Unioa-men cloitins to destroy ive&au drag tut .cpnntry, into war,, under rRSTsurr or fretecting jtb. puplto property, and.eufotcinff the laws aod - collect- urine reTtnne. wuen.uieiv ooieci a4iannon. : .1 , . 1 .1 1 . and WAR raa xxAva -or accoarusBtxa. csxaisHKo rintrosx.-; -Ki . . t . Disonionists, therefor, are divided into two classes the on open, the- other secret secessionists. ' The on is- in favor of peacful se cession and recognition of independence j the other u in favor ot war as the snrest tneabs of accomplishing the object, and making the asparation final and eternal. 1 am a UNION MAN, and hence AGAINST WAR; but if tho Union must be temporarily broken by a' revo lution, and the establishment of a facto government by some of th State, let no act be done that will prevent restoration and preservation: Peace ia the only policy that can lead to that result. '. ; - ; 1 But we are told, and hear Me repeated every where, that we must find out whether we have a Governments "Have, we a Government ?" ia the question; and we are -told that we must test that question br usinethe Tnilitarv rjower to put down alt discontented spirit. - Sir, this question, "Have we a Goerriment?': ha been propounded by every -tyrant who -baa tried to keep his feet oa the necks of the peo ple since the world began. - ; - When the Barons demanded iftona Charta froth King John at Runneymedev he exclaim ed, " Have we A Gbven ment f and called for his army to pot ' down the discontented ' Bar ons. When Uharlea I attempted to collect the ships' money in violation of the Constitution of England, and in disregard of the rich ts of the people, and was resisted, he exclaimed. "Have we a Government?" When James II wan driven from the throne of England for trampling on the liberties of the beoDle, he called for his army- and . exclaimed, 44 Let us show that' we have a Government? When George III called upon hia army to put down rebellion in America, Lord'-'North cried lusti- i'o compromise with traitors; let us dem onstrate that we have have a Government!' When in 1848, the people roe uparainst their tyrant all over Eh rope, and demanded guarantees for their rights, every crowned head exclaimed, " Have we a Government ?"; ami ap-pealeii to the army to vindicate their authority and enforce the law. Sir, the history of the world does not fail to condemn the folly, weakness and wicked news of the Government which drew i ts sword upon its own people, when they demanded guarantees for their rights. Tht-cry that we must have a Government is merely following the example 01 tne oespotted JJoyroons, who. nev er leprned anything but misfortune, never forgave an injury, never forgot an affront.' Must we demonstrate that we have a Government, and force ebedienee without reCerenc . to- th juetitce or injustice of the complaint? Sir, whenever ten millions of people proclaim to you, with one unanimous voice, that they apprehend their firesides and their family altar are in danger, it becomes a wise Government to listen to the appeal, and remove the apprehension. History does not record an example where any human Government has been strong enough to crush ten millions of people into subjectionwhen they believed their right and liberties were imperiled, without first converting the Government itself into a deepo iam and destroying the last vestige of freedom.' ' .' ! .' .- ; . . V; : Let us take warning from the examples,, of the past. Whenever a Government ha re. fused to lffiten to the complaint of ber people, and attempted to pat down their murmur bv the bayonet, they hate paid the penalty.: Of all those who listened to the people in '48, and granted charters of liberty and took . an oath to support them, only one has been faithful, and be ha been rewarded for bis fidelity. The King of Sardinia granted a Constitution, and took an oath to support it, and to-day he is King of Italy. If George the Third had listened to the murmurs of our fathers. and granted their jnst demands, the War of the Revolution would have been averted, and the blood that was spilled would have been saved. -j ' If we consider (he qnestton calmly, and make such amendments as will convince' the people of the Southern States that they are safe, are secure in their persons, in that property and in their family relations, within the Union, we can restore and preserve it. If we can not satisfy th people of the Border State that they remain in the Union, with safety, dissolution is inevitable. Then the .simple question comes back, what shall be the policy of the Union men of this country ? What man in all America, with a heart in hi bosom, who ' knows the facta Connected with Fort Sumter; can hesitate in saying that duty, honor, patriotism humanity, requires that Anderson Attd; bis band should be instantly withdrawn ? - Sir, I am not afraid to say so. ' ,"' ' . I would "scorn to take a party advantage or manufacture partisan capital out of aa act of patriotism. - . - ' . t ' ' ; PEACE is the only policy that save the country. Let peace berocJaimedju the policy, and you will find that a thrill of joy will animate the heart of every patriot in the land; confidence will be. restored; business will-be revived; joy will gladden every heart; bon fires will blaze on- every . hill .top and in the valleys ; and the Church bells will pro laim the glad tidings in every city, town and village in, America, and 'the applause of a grate ful people will greet you every where. - Proclaim the policy of war, anl there.will b a ploom and sadness. and despair pictured oa the face of every patriot in the land. - Awar of kindred, family and friend' -rather WgSinat son, mother against daughter, brother against cromer, 10 suojugat one-nan or this country into .obedience to fhe'other' half: If you dp with their prayers." tad honor him 5-witIr their I shoQtg Ofjdy. . "fk,.v-;, ' i-n ..ivirrtj t The tnilca3i& ork TrilncnA gTt e.xnrrnicytoa irWotu falsehood th : pretended wcriatioaTol: a plot tolig6rau:cltil War ttf IBe-Nbrt&irett wilVfreon wto ptorrtlthyjBVf Jet "ihern- lils Ihia tSePTtnbirledof auRfentIfea?'rIf TI7 - . m y r- - ar liar and UWXai itliairotiaeaa:' DIGlXAl?,AMlrFIlIUEIMIl. A- I ! . -1 CATT. WIUX1K im. i : : .v,,. Wjrlry-e'as; , j Skoatiar V.ilandirham and tntim. e51raUyirbTJkehllKWo; m rwdt girb:fro-tnlib-A Ihoatias raikuKBtgham mi fjneedoia , .,-, TheliBuon forever. UaerA ks, Unrrah I 1 , - twv mis vyytrossoa" - - 0 : i-TJp with the law f r.i ; . .. --. , . WhQ we rally round the lag, boys, Rally onee agala. ShohrVanAWigbamsJadfrdo : We are rallying to tfaioi&$i. .Tliree hundred theM4 inoro Show tin ValUadigfcam and fretdPm, ' a. And weH march ineolidraaks its oar fhUmif..4ioofyofii" : , ; ShputingrVsilandighaa aasj Aeedom "'' ; The 'banot-box forever, hhljah b; hurrkh'l' '' I iown with p7rteivir!i.-: .0 '. HWalls,weralIv Ue pSkWy. . - -. t1lJcf5lPr - .v'- . ShMingaUaadickAialrdo J We''wdl welcome to our nilfch :- : . The Honest, Trnt and Braver ' Shoasing Vallandigham and freedom, : ' ' Although he may h peer, 4 He shait'never b slave, : Shohfing Vallaadicham and freedom-ri; ' . ; 1 The Union-forever, )e ; - - . 77 ' So Weir harry to tne polls, boyV, - - Jfrom the Bast ad from the West, ' Bhontwg Valbindigham and freedom, .. And we'll teach oppression! efew ' " With the aiggersismt the reat, ..80, shout -VaUlandigham ad freedom, .: the Union fbtover, c ' r A PEOULAfiLY BIOHDISGUSSION. . i , i . .. 1 Tne Democratic EXeetinr at Ver , ., millioit.;iP!4o. ; ; i HON. SAM. 8, COX- IffTKTtEUPTEt) BT .AN ABOLITION D.OCTQjjrjLOK" OBKRUN. Oox Questions liiSpUnid Polit ical l-ilt-Flenfy W Fvm - : From the Erie County (Ohio) .JTews, Augrt S. S. Cox on. the Beaexra Hie Speech at VermillioiLrrHis dtwith the Ober Un : Doctor Corriea JH&i Down and haa Him Buried on titer Lake Shore, r . Many of our readers do najr know' that qbite a number of Republicans wefvat the Demo cratic meeting at Vermin ionin lhe 7th.inst. x ui crowa, as we nave, nerftoiore saul, .was immense : and in a WesternVReserve countv. only a few miles from the seat of Abolitionism, Oberlin, it could not well betotberwise than that. h goodly ami godly apriakHng of fanatics were on hand, lpough wexdo. not suppose they, would average one to every . hundred in attendance: .The Republican. IWwever,' be- ing'astonishel at tbeturn Otki claimed that many of their party attended tbb' meeting. If this is the fact, we failed tadiacover them, as all, with one exception, obred the speakers, and appeared to JUsv-. at!fioiai' ! - . ; W hen Mr. PeDdletoo spoke; a certain learn ed Doctor (Biglpw, we believe hi name is)' of Ubehn;, began, as VP expresses rt, "to pro- peouod interreocatortes," fie tried some doz en on the Cincinnati Congressmen, who deftly drew him out into the admission that he didn't want the . old Union with slavery. After hr bad been lashed into seemine rood order by .Mr. Pendleton, he again essayed to " propeound" while Mr, Cox was speakiag. The surgical operation by which his hide wa taken. off and hia fleah Iarcerated, and hia bones pounded in a mortar, ha never had a parallel ia this part of Ohio, We ararequested. a Secretary and repor ter of the meeting, to give a sketch of the performance: but-ao pen can picture iC .Thaim- oiense crowd of German, which Mr.' Dresset bad been addreeingr adjourned and helped to eweu iti nia meeung ; and the .assemblage ror pize, Kr animaupn, tor- toe, place . (00 - u take shore, in a beautiful grove.) jwa one rare Jbr thie part of Ohio. .The Oberli. Doctor was a'severe looking man, with iron' gray hair and 'beard. He carried a sbeavv :cane.' with-which hi proped op a heavy- chin : 'and heseented as definn( as Don Quixote, and aa sanctimonious aa Praise God Barebonea. -T When. Mr. Cox betran be took un a position immediately beneath Wm ', the crowd pressed-up close) and at the -first fire all became eager to near, the targe etaM "waa immediately overcrowded with people.'" ' ' v ; : v axr. vox waa aec taring tnat, nowever wrong and disloyal Democrats, might be, it dHi not become the Western Reserve Republicans to reproach them. He would take no lessons of patnotietn from " saeh seditions -' people. 'He woohl not call wames : at would leave that to his opponents. If.heaid that th Republi can of the Reserve were Abolitionists, nulli- rJers and secessionist, be would prove it ; and by their own' testimony. If he could not convince them of; the virtu of Democracy, he' would at least close -their owo Pharisaical cant about the Union. The person, said Mr. Cox, ho has been interrupting Mr: Pendleton, does not know, perhaps, that he has been singing over arrd over again Greeley's song about the flag? Teer down the litnating lie, . ' .-: iiait ac the etarry tag, ' Insult no shining sky ' With bate's polluted rar. For my friend, Mr. Pendleton, marrieif a daughter of the poet Key! who wrote the Star Spangled Banner., f Cheers.) W have- the old flag on our aid ilaaghterl ami thia dicf- pe of Greeley can't tear it down, even in this Reserve'.f' I do not know who this, maligner of our party, ji ; but lwill 'wager eojaething that he ia frbha Oberlin. ' " - 4 . ! Several 'Voices You're right. " He ' is one of tho saint.'?. - ILaughtr.r ' I Mr. Cox I will show yoa that, if he ..be hoDesthe is a disunionist. If be will give. me bis attention a moment, he will se himself in a mirror. Yon beliete, sir,-i a Wendell Phil' lip, '4ont-'yoar - ' .-.; : - i Dr. RigkwT-,Yet,ir; aad I ca handle yoa ataiiy.time .a ' Mi, CoiWelt Vdtt wnt ee a-boot .that .when wW'get tbrough VJudgiiig byJ th way yorforeheadrejre so Rapidly, t bat handled your befterr.i'A faugh. 1 Wendell Pbil-lpaaaid iUntU lS4lV we thohgkt Irpossltl if kill slavery and aax (ha UniWalhen Midvprer, rwnafihmer stna ue,A nqn m to pnix max t ireedom.T- loafT . a w.er-.m BxiOPn dra wsion JtolLr pendTpiihat jroo are aot for thaoId-XInroa TM hsvs kTba hn bir!a!.Uaa "IT w TMone5t1JT, on.ao. not: want Ood ' 4 Mr. Yootarefor oukJ deetroy Ui Uaion J ilr. Cax-r-Zrhtn roa ef commute with iEwr? i 'i DrBliwond xnak &tber-ibaoTa wiit alavebolder. Wha.i hre'yow then bot a diaunionUt. fCheer. -:You area twin broth- . w m . w r w . 1 a ertoyjerx. jyavip. r iMugater, A you,,. nay from Oberlin, you no dbtabt' joined with ."tbe other saint in commemorating John Brown's death, o the dartPakd etbrtny 23 .tfpceav ber, 1859, when Virginia hune him aadaelit bis soat 00 tfee downward xnarcb... iLaugh ter.r When Spaulding, 'Riddle. BTerce. Til- den. Wolcott. and tour Ret. Brewster. " arid your n'egrb orator LaTSgston,' deified th horse-thief marauder and murderer, you were there, t doubts not. , .. .r.-r j. . t)r. ft. aasenled.' '': ' ' . -Mr, i'oX You shouted when Laneston said t " Bat w'hy; preserve tbUakaj siacwita only olaect ie W eternalize slavery 1 : Such .a Uatoa is not wort bT perpetaatiaz. v With all mt heart, I should say, let it be aboliahed. I bate the Union of these states, as I hate the rferifc-fbr bV U I'araPbereft,o1 everv riht a a citizen, and denied all protection for toy' per-sohal:lUerty'i .011 yeapersonal liberty wa a great thing for negroes, When you defied the ' Constitution : but it is a poor thing for a white man like Vallandtehatn.: when the ' Constitu tion is outrazed. Langston, your disunion ne- gro,,ia,.raiflipg regiments of blacks to fight now, and Mt. VaNandigbam is in exile" because he loved the Union better than even his Own personal fre10ftt.n-iA t th ia -Barfl e hrteti n g of your Reserve disunionist and I read it from a. pamphlet, printed by . your fjienda it Was resolved (paie 8) that 1" in such a contest. and ujider such, a dire, necessity,-we 'aay.Jet irrtxjuui niaiMi, iiougrr ire union- 00 OiSSOlV-edi" The dire necessity was the choking? 4f Joha Brow nr. t Because Virginia did that, you 1: '.T .'tt ...... -r , - wuuiu not iitb wun ner in. toe union. 1 guo-mit it to tou, now. whether you did " not de serve bis fale ?': f Cheers. I " Xou eee. sir. that L prove all I say as I go along. ' .- . . Nqwj to npve jpa, a Seceionist,vI hat here a speech of President Lincoln, printed by himself, at the.office Qf J. AG. S. tlideon, m reference to the President' Messace.' " It was detitered January 14, 1848. On the. eighth page he declared, that "any people, any wherev being inclined, and having the power, have the right to. rise up and.shake off the existiiiff Government; and form a "new one thaf . suits th em better. Any portion of such people may revolution tze and make their own of so much of the territory as they inhabit." . Yon votei for Lincoln I .Did you approve of that doc trine? Twill prove that tou did, for yoasuD ported the men who plotted, bv violence." to nullity and -overturn the Federal authority in Ohio. '--'-"," ':' .v-: ; This people will remember the .Wellington rescue ; cases. A batch ot revolutionists of Oberlin strove. tobak 4fown the Federal authority right here. This man before me may have helped to rescue tb.e negro boy Jon n from United States officers." . He is a pretty person to callon 'othe'rs to Biippbrf the Feder al Government; lBghter.j: These Oberlin rescuers were tried, convicted, and about to be sentenced by the United State Couit at Clete- land, wnen a meeting was caned at Cleveland, to revolutionize and by violence overthrow the Federal power. ;; They sought, like South Car olina, the agency of the State to do it. The Republican Governor,-Chase, and hia Attor ney General helped it on I have the account of that meeting a Republican paper. Here it is I I Here Mr. Cox held up the Ohu State TrmrnAl of. May 26, 185Q, pretty .well worn.l It has seen some ser'vicfe,tRis paper: a little the worse for wearike: the Republican par- sy; daughter. 1 : ; ., .. ! . : : Dr.- U, Let, me see it, i you. nieaee. J Mr- cox nanaeit it to uie JJoctor. . lie , Jopked it orer, wiped titar specks .'and pronounced it genovme. j . Mr. 'Cox Tbisi paper save, there were ten or twelve thousand Republicans from, the, Re serve present. No , doubt Oberlin was there. Laughter.! Ferbap you were there, air.-Dr. B 1 was, and an bfond of it. , Mr. Cox And yoU aprwoved of their action and Uieir resolutions f .. Dr. B. Ye, sir j.Tdo, and did, ' , Mr. uox Now, 1 have you. If I do. not prove you to- b. a seCesaiOnist, revolutioniet and niuJifierir. then there: is no truth in youiC own statement. : l r, ad farther that this vast meeting marched, into Cleveland with banners, with feVofuthmary devices and music. John Brown had not then Leen'hung,' else they would have sung hia'rharch, instead of plav- Migthe Marseilles." . .Old men were put at the 1 . .fil. r 7.1 a . . iieaa.ot ine prpaeesion,. wiia. nnge, imprinted with "uo." lhen came the Loraine Coun It deleeation tffvr crowd, sir, of mobocrats against the Union. You were in-; it.- Per haps you carried the banner : Inscribed" Lo- raine ot) one side, and on the other Here is the Government : Let tyrants beware.w Do you remember that ? You .do. Well. where, waa 'the Government t It was not then iii the Administration oh I no you had not .1: T 1 l ; yi l' - . : . men got Lincoln ana a is vaoinei at rvasn-ington. ' "Here is th Government"-- in this mob of Jaw-haters and higher law revolutionists! -Here is tiie power to overthrow and de stroy. What a commentary I .; We Democrats said then, as.now that the Government is not in men;- not in mob at Uberlin,- nor asents at Washington ; but in the Coneliution. f Cheer.! We at. let ttrants .beware who vl oh t to ;overn mental chart. Cheers. W say auiud by the Government ajrainst mobs in Ohio, in 1859, Or in NeW -.-York city in 1863 against usurpations of State authority in 1859, 6rof Federal authority in 1863. 1 Cheer. 1 ; Yet it ia the Democracy, that is reproached as j 1 1 1 . , . . , ujaioTai vj eucn scum oi seamon as noated to the - surface then; and 'has floated ever SHtce. . '-. '. - ' . This meeting; waa a typexf the Republican party. It followed Lincoln's doctrioe. Eve ry prominent Republican in Ohio was there, in person or by' letter. .' You, my7 sweet evangelical friend, voted for one of the Committee on Resolution. Mr. ' Blake,: and inaae him Congressman. Chase approved by speech. and fennison oy letter, ol the meeting and its objects. Giddinga 'was 'Prei lent. Perhaps yon hat:heard of him. --- ; ' ' Dr. B.t. A nobler man does' pot Jbreath. & ' Mr. Cox No donbt you a pproved; ofhis course. He told Mr. Ewing.- in : his letter, of the 7th "of Notember. I860, that when -,h VheM ob to tb-"BpobHcans; the 'humbug of oiesoroTion, tnat ne was-a cowaru, ana an nn- virilamrnuMvoI ta1a power you tbeazht him a prophet. When be advised ymt,.to shoot down United State office., with warrant .for fugitive slaves, as pirates, yew f hAttvhtlftm fc'hwat natrlot."' T7hn htAii fied the b&tiabei arfa,' aiitt ; tb gnarn-tk for tbabxry ifl negroea,Ma.yo4 party despises habeas cerpw outra reraonal freedom tar hit oen and, tm jh penury of an Ohio Governor, permit afwhita nan to be banished, not for Crijiie.'bat for'bre ventton ' ,You thmk yoo : hfghrln ?yotfrtoyaltf that all l)emcratii are 'Copperhead traitcrs. (Cheers. So much 4br-GiWijr nvf tLln civiam hd Utrshkai- yeri fcJJuwed WL eUa were f th i retotjpnarye-jin tjt tore, to revolutionize portion.- rcr? the r9s-cla aealnst th Federal Oprer ;.U4htfviler 1 th Coramitteo L-isolaliouai B.F. T7J. Morrrp,wCpaTiciI al.J4amixtA) oiittOaiow aad a reotlea ; Conrraaemaa 1 Bmcc JBegjablican ejt JSnia P ia Hitflheoeki Repobjioari, Seaatok Xltnuaant worwrtiqrira iwiit;xfiiil nut oiuc u ucn. lue wnoie nepuniicaa party were tme-represeated. f-p. KrOtrter, one 01 .incoin s appointee jp a a'sageanip at wasnington, antra loud union man now ; Root, ot sandtisjtvi DeJano,xf Moonuyemo. who pretend to be shoekedal-trakoV now; Jridee Spauldinr iheiaYdaodConxreesman : V President Aa Mahant Pf Oberlin andjJthers. 1 inj1ntitkfr) thJ intfitsKtWwi . t. a oa a orasor iot otaos: xroope--aad Governor Chase. These were the!; truxopeU. of sedition, whoae voice Inspired the revolutionista.. One saidr -r'Ohip shall,. not, iu God'e', name,,, she shall not be md if hunting ground lor elate catchers." "You applauded that. .Dr:B:aseotedi;? -.-;57 M"r. Cox He said : "Stand steadv. trust in God and keep your powder dry,' and look for the things thaithaffit" -You .bad drv now- der too. f Laughter Chase mad ball cartridge at Oolumbuav The thitir that -ehoald be have since been John Brown, revolution I and bloodj wa for tEe nerroH Another Batlt l "Ler the CederI auhprUy mnk tie ie Ad test the fact whether tee uruY execute our laws-Ther know jiot how soon the smouldering Vol cano will urst; under their rottep jcarcasaee And you applauded tEatJ and now have the jngid coolness and brazen' effrontery to appear among us and taiic. a voq,dul to MrvPendlav ton. about dialoval DerrsVeata: fObsm l Wn . - - - - - ' - - It J . . -iuj nui.i,cocrTc-pc xinnrori -x .oescow, oniy that ypu are a type of a class or slanderers. You approved of the reaolfttiona, "Declaration of Independence,'' as it waa called. You confeseed that. Do you remember them. Here is one": "Thai the enforcement of such las (as the Fugitive Slave against an unwilling people, is productive only of evils threatening the pubiia.order and th stability of governmental institut ions." You hurrahed for that ? What now of the ' Conscription Law ? LAaghter.J. mSome ace.unvyllino; tQ go to war. r That law Corn pels; -you would not em force it hey ? Laughter. What a beautiful specimen of a copperhead! Laughter. Dp you approve of thafr-dwloval resolution ? You are all at once dumb. " Cheera.T" You were, very fond-of ialkine. all ., dat. Your speech was exceedingly free. Your internied-dlingin this meeting like the intermeddling fgenerally of your claBs was tery unpleasant y, disorder I y and conapicipue. uWhy don't you answer now ? Cries of "Hit him again" "Bully for Cox" "He's nothin? but a darned nigger thief." ' I do not make any personal attacks on him. He may have been a nigger thief ; no doubt lie and. his superiors have been makinz trouble bv- their inTermed- dling politics for th irty years : but he is. dumb as an oystet now.; - Won't you-pleas say. now do whether you still favor that resolution. " Just nod; yes or no. Not a nod. Laughter. I am sorry I closed : vou un so quickly. rLaugh'ter; Well, the Democracy say :let all laws be obeyed;'Cpqscrii)lion Law jt ugiuicKi rmw am ait wneiner we lute them or not till they are-'adjndicated to be void, or repealed. by:utatCirJhra.l We fought all iawleeneee and mob in 1859. a we denounce them jio.w, W stand by the Federal Union in 1803 as we 'did inlSi9,when in is genueman ana otner were. A Voice DoVt caTT him a gentleman! H once said he would b willing to hate a negro to marry one of hi ,daughtre."There,a. a rouDg man here that is ready, to swear he uearu n. jauater.j - ... , loung man xes, i oe. Mjiieers aud iaughter. - - t ' .' ' .Mr. Uox Never mind that, That is a do- - -; ' a mesuo matter ana connected more with taste than politic. Laughter.! I said I wonl, prove thia Uberlia vanzelist to be s Sucm ion ist. What els do J eff. Davis and hia confederates hold; but that tbey will ribt have United estates laws enforced on-an Vnnwillino- peoole?" .'Tliia Lincoln's doctrine of 1848; 'and these Resrve disorganize re. ; aidl by Chase, Delano. Denison A Co.. hav been' the frienda and aiders oT Secessionists: fpr thet sDorueu iue pretext ana gave tne. provocation to Southern revolt.' Cheers. " Consult1 the ordinance or secession ' and Judge' Brinkerhofr dissenting opinion in the maoeaa cvrjm rase irom-uoeriin, and yoa- will find this nullification doctrine laid down" al most as recorded in thia Republican platform, It is the Mates rights Calhoun doctnn inten sified and enlarged far beyond what Madison ever dreamed, and far beyond what Democrat ever dreamed when tbey used it in their plat forms. Madison never proposed to make nni lification or secession the remedy for any griev ance: oui nis i-emeay. was,- a out is, ander the Constitution, and by its amendments.- This was and is Democratic doctrine. But Abolition made itself a secession did,' the sole judge; above the Supreme Court, above all Federal authority, of all the mode and measures of redree. Hence when this man before me approved this heresy, he became the twin brother of Jeff. Davis. Laughter and cheers I do not know which is the meanest ; revolu tion ny secession and war or revolution Insid lously by -violent Abolitionism -and Oberlin ethics. But until both heresies are expunged from the American mind," peace and good will will never return. At this time part of the 'stand gave way, in consequence of its being "orer crowded." and itnt to mt grouna. r orranareijr no on wa seriously injured, although . Mr. Pendleton's son was considerably bruised hy others falling on nun, ju.r. ox ana your report erer. being light weight " remained above.. During tne conmsion tne uneriin Evangelist slipped on, ana was seen no mere.; Air. HJOX SOpn re sumed, and closed his speech amid rreat en thusiasm. ' SucH a lesson to Oberlin was much needed.' 7 1 was given with good hnmor, and will long be remembered by the "saint" and others present. ; ' ; ;; ; Edward Ererett'a Soni Hot in the ' " r:: ' "' Rank. .. ; 1 A parairrabb ha been iwtie the ronnda ts ting that Edward . Everett' two. son.; who 1iaveeen drafted in Boston,: wr roier into the" field. This is not tle case. .They - both paid the $300 ePminntation. Cia Cbwt, '.' Sucli'war-ahriekeraa Mr. EtxarrT "destre etery body 1a'8oo''lo go Jnto the arrby but their own.' Xn : this connection Veat baee mm) the followiBgr- r tOatawf Bidc-Ua anywIatnV country to tjtiti aoout the -wir, atid now that ;tfi w -. . . . t . . . . ' ... . 1 vaiian-.XavjUOveseZ. Tl z iiar8 4 aii. KwvjKe rac: tauttmci AS lWArPhTafpipatiism araoirjAhe &ttc6nttpte it6 pa!3 IE comma UUjqd is naa cota tu song reroa IP Chtla it I CS. is,;:uJroj3 rrttrJ ."5ffie 'nU 3ye4 r. t vr i n it'-'.iii.-.'ii.tt 1 1- mriiw AAu.y c 01 1. 1 f-i rJTte Oca CJ IaTjuid'ha'ci'. 2artl Urtr?m iair tier br Jt fewslr-f U,wiFrehiake eif ri j cr deaci ed XXiobigair. High-haaded Ontragi at the Prorcri Maiilxaicaa-Xiraaa ty Lahet:ea lit Dare radc AaIa Tetttifatioa Dexaaade'Cr CpUulrrkUelk -witeJI IiTj !titJtO yeaterdayby report of a biliucmiad oatrare committed on the person' of a mn, named Joseph Ilap.ate Protoat Oljalaeft on Fourth-street. From all we can learn eo ceming the matter, it would appear that Ha-ren enlisted some tim ago in the Sixty'-third Regiment, and deserted- A few days sine, it is alleged, b offere himself aaybstirf for a citizen of the First Ward", who waa a worn in and sent, ta camp. He remained but a abort tim in" camn. and nothing mrr- ras llieardof him until yesterday; when: -a . la al- .- leged, he.preseated ftiulelf t be Provost Marshal's office, as a adbstUo.t lor a man who had juat.beU JbimO. ,,2s i , atat-;? ment of th Clerk in the olSce themelvea, but whetherjk it correct or not w caanotsay., " Hagen had passed examination and was about JSeing sworn in the second time, when he was recognized,; whereupon ordera" .were- giveo. tofl-take him up stairs and ffiv AimJifyl aeA asT punishment for his attempt to impose- npon th Boarl, Our information doe ot state" precisely from whom this order emanated,-bat:, as Captain-Poster wa present anl either gar it himself, or heard it siren, bai of eoursfc. muet be hoJJ-respoDiibl. -. . -. .-- xiagen was bow seized by the guard and ta. sen to in -renaeztous". in th third arorr. where preparations were at "once made" for ear-rying the order into effect.'' Th ' man a w - are informed waa striped nakedw gaged and sK handcuffed. A raw cowhide was procued,' . T and a' soldier named Georce Palmer, corrjoral- of the guard, under direction of Deputy Pro: tost Marshal MeHeury, who wa present prd ceeded to lay oath stripe.- Hagen; compare itively powerless though he was, resisted -and McHenry, a is alleged, called on the oldir present to ho'd hira - while1 the stripes wer reing laid on. This the latter rfued to da. " whereupon as the report goes, McHenry -hini-- d pelf seized th wretched man, and held .hiwL until the entire fifty lashes were admihistttti:, Hagen struggled violently in his agony, but . before the sentence was half carried out'hc felt prostrate 00 the floor, andJwhU in this coo '" dition the balance of the lashes wer admin?- tered him. His condition when taken up wa pitiable in the extreme. Hi back s Hire" a piece of raw beef, the cowhide having cut r through the skin, and he wa - o exhaoated that he could not support himself.. A geDtle man who saw him. to-day, 'while th doctor '. was dressing bis woonde, sutes that he moat """' ; have received a most shockin florahov a! - that bai he not been a man of strooe conti- tntion be would h ve died under; th iasio tion. -. '. ' ' ' "" ' An outrage SO bieh-hinded aa the above has" ? seldom been com nail ted in ant - commanitr; and it is due to the public that tb GOver-- ment promptly repudiate th action of it ofl- cers in the matter, by the dismissal or euspen- . sion from all concerned. The Conaerintionr -rtf- Act.: Heaven knows, i un popular enonghi without bringing it into the odiam which-. higbdyiBdedaxtsof 'lilaiifff-tllH lLj'LUi" are calculated to create, and" It behoove the-Govarament, thenrto b carefal how It n. t ploys men to execute the law whoa course b. - gets but irritation, and complaint, where mod- eration andonciliation are required. W do' not. of oonrser justify, or pretend to justify,; 4 Hagen conduct. Th law. civil or military ? permits-no sucb sever? and barbarous punish ment as flogging on the bar back, but en if v5 it did, and no matter how guilty the man'may tf have been, jhe Provost Marshal had no rfghf "" to take that law in hia own hands, and hlr"" doing so wa-entirely gratuiiouBi oer-hi- part.C Hi business was. to have reported the -man Mf a deserter, And then let a court-martial deal 'i with him as his' case miht deserve. Thi'1 roatter-i talked of a good deal oat of door it day, and some anxiety is expressed . to learn r s what tepe, jf any, te Secretary of ; War-willr take when he hear of th affair. Of coure great latitude will be allowed General Moore-5 head's appointee, but if an outrage so waotoo" " " and tyrannical aa this is orerlooked. there is no telling where tb thine may atopi or what may come from it. Pituhurg Evening Chron-' icle, August 4th. - - --- - - 7 ' WiieonainV Th Wisconsin Democracy bad a targe and earnesrState Con vention at Milwaoke on the fa 5th inst., Hon. If. SvOrton being Preshlenf ,7 thereof.; The ' following noralea'tion yre're ' 9 -made;?: -' , - ' . - '- "i ; PorOoternor, Henry IX Palmer.- ; ' For, LieateaantrGovernor, Ex -Governor' ' Dewey. . . .. . ;, 4. -4 n v .v.,'.. For Sacretary of Stat, Emil RotbeV ". t. For Treasurer, Charles 15. Benton. . For A ttorney General, Eieazer WaEeley. The ticket is a trog on,'combining aa thV ' Mjiwaukee Xews remark, " mpr ability ex- ' " perienc in publld afTaif Afirft htr' 1 character than any other ticket erer placed irf - 15 Th resolution vera ai- follows .. I; Mesolvedf That ws reaffirm' ,tnl svlopi tb? t axldresa issued ly the Stat -Convention hL September 3d 1802, a hdjth resolution of the 1 Mas Convention -beI.lTat"tlfilwake. . Joa 25. 1863. a the settled dAtftri crade party of thie St it.' ?- . " . Jietotved, Thai w hail wrth delight aorpe - inanifeetaiion pf a desire on th nart Jt iKi ; people of eoro of the seceiline States to return a totheir aliegiancetdthe Union, and heAA ii to be th doty of the Administration cordially to co-operate with th peopf of oeb Sater' ri for. tbeir restoration to the Union with .11 iKW ', gnaraatees of their righu and iatereate coe- Miin-u in u constitution. . . "" Besotted. That whilr s"wmM ii' draw onr armies from tKt flcM.,mii. ..M. ner recpgntx lb so called Cob fed R , yet if such, maaifeetation aboa Li ' eral throughout th eoeded State, we beliere" c that the ofSce ef peace should 'sDnereed tboa of war, and. that it wonld to anch Tat b th duty f the Admtawtratioa age tb holdmg of a COTstltrtlonal Convention ' ot all the state to rMtotw-peaca, maiaUla ib tniojtaAjgopxiartth Constltation, - l t It was not TTotl. C .1 VaT!-T-4,- . i. - tiade vct the Ibliowln- Ianrnar. btil tzsZ ' : P.1- Wade f - i' ; : - . " t Tc cannot fbreaiT men In (kitfV '--T ... fb tb ftttemrt Id 0 aolk seem to ff-r- ! i 1 " sbbVert th"rt:prtaeiprekjd,4j3vcr3 t : tlerwhlcli .Anfn wsasaerf it wsa mtA .1?'. fa . j-. 1 . . , . ' . nam, oui io wad. wtKirj - cam daonc4a a-c-war . dxel, -whorTft-strtlie"-. " irfj'fc fcrocfitit C- affT.l ttSh-f!rr-r . - . tOr; i4n!r "til Piils f . T l-rThad?fi rerlhie u.. sy.j-ra A 1 11 11 si. - 5 1